Steve Ferres says "The RFL are mindful of the testing economic climate and how it is impacting on the game generally. As a result, licensing requirements are being relaxed to enable clubs to explore different routes to ensure they achieve Super League status." So while the Championship clubs bust a gut to get SL fit Stadiums we are now told SL clubs dont need to bother! Championship clubs Fev, Fax and Sheffield despite being PT and having smaller income run various academy teams, SL cant be bothered and want too spend money more on the first team. Seriously frustrating being a fan when the rules change to fit certain clubs whilst others are treated differently. The RFL should be doing whats best for the game. Currently thats not happening and the way they do things is for me a disgrace. I cant see a SL club being kicked out of SL right now and I cant see a Championship club getting in unless a club goes bankrupt

Steve Ferres says "The RFL are mindful of the testing economic climate and how it is impacting on the game generally. As a result, licensing requirements are being relaxed to enable clubs to explore different routes to ensure they achieve Super League status." So while the Championship clubs bust a gut to get SL fit Stadiums we are now told SL clubs dont need to bother! Championship clubs Fev, Fax and Sheffield despite being PT and having smaller income run various academy teams, SL cant be bothered and want too spend money more on the first team. Seriously frustrating being a fan when the rules change to fit certain clubs whilst others are treated differently. The RFL should be doing whats best for the game. Currently thats not happening and the way they do things is for me a disgrace. I cant see a SL club being kicked out of SL right now and I cant see a Championship club getting in unless a club goes bankrupt

I think it might work in the favour of CC clubs. Relaxing licensing requirements in order to enable clubs to explore different routes to ensure they achieve SL status could well mean a return of P & R with minimum standards. This seems to be a popular opinion by people in the know just now.

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There will be more changes ahead but if we continue as we are keep backing the club and team and the club keeps moving forward we never know what will happen
Reading between the lines some championship clubs look healthier than the S/L ones

There will be more changes ahead but if we continue as we are keep backing the club and team and the club keeps moving forward we never know what will happenReading between the lines some championship clubs look healthier than the S/L ones

I think you could be right as i would'nt be surprised if all the SL teams were in debt just some in more debt than others in some cases i bet. But it could work both ways.Moving the goal posts to keep c*s in SL as their ground isnt up to standard or help our teams in the CC to move up.I know which my money's on but you never know as i cant see them doing that just for c*s as london are safe no matter what as we can see.

There will be more changes ahead but if we continue as we are keep backing the club and team and the club keeps moving forward we never know what will happen Reading between the lines some championship clubs look healthier than the S/L ones

That's spot on. I was thinking about changes and wondered how many people remembered when we had one league. Thinking about it there were a lot of advantages. All Yorkshire clubs played each other and all Lancashire/ Cumberland clubs played each other. You then played 4 teams of the same standing, based on previous seasons placings, from the other county. This meant we played: Cas, Wakey, Leeds, Bradord, Halifax etc in Yorkshire and Wigan, Saints and Warrington in our four teams from Lancs. No promotion or regulation to think about and a play off at the end of the season. We also had the Yorkshire and Lancashire cups and titles. Income was higher and competition was good. What do you think about going back to those days. It could be worse.

As Terry has pointed out I think the present consensus is a return to promotion and relegation and I believe things are going on in the background to a return to allowing a team to be promoted with less stringent standards..albeit it will possibly be to clubs only that show ambition to succeed or wish to be promoted; Some clubs will prefer to stay within the championship and quite rightly so;

That's spot on. I was thinking about changes and wondered how many people remembered when we had one league. Thinking about it there were a lot of advantages. All Yorkshire clubs played each other and all Lancashire/ Cumberland clubs played each other. You then played 4 teams of the same standing, based on previous seasons placings, from the other county. This meant we played: Cas, Wakey, Leeds, Bradord, Halifax etc in Yorkshire and Wigan, Saints and Warrington in our four teams from Lancs. No promotion or regulation to think about and a play off at the end of the season. We also had the Yorkshire and Lancashire cups and titles. Income was higher and competition was good. What do you think about going back to those days. It could be worse.

Not going to happen. The RFL want the best teams to play each other. Also they're committed - rightly or wrongly - to a national competition.

I wouldn't worry too much. Promotion & Relegation is almost certainly coming back very soon...

I hope it's run on the right lines this time, i.e. making sure that P&R happens every year. When Dewsbury and Hunslet won the GF they either weren't allowed in because of their grounds or they withdrew their application. In both cases the bottom club stayed in SL, but shouldn't promotion have been offered to the top Championship club that met the criteria? This practice caused a stir when Widnes (the bottom SL club) loaned a load of Super League players to Doncaster, who hadn't applied for SL, in the hope that the Dons would win the GF and save Widnes from relegation.